Ask most muscle car enthusiasts to identify the car that kicked off the muscle car era, and they will most likely say it was the 1964 Pontiac GTO and not the 1962 Plymouth Fury Max Wedge. Why? Because ...
Introduced in 1956 as a sub-series of the Belvedere, the Plymouth Fury became a stand-alone model in 1959. The nameplate remained in production through 1989, with a short break in 1979. The vehicle ...
Introduced in 1956 as a sub-series of the Belvedere, the Plymouth Fury became a stand-alone nameplate in 1959. Three years later, it was downsized due to a corporate mistake, before being returned to ...
The '62-'64 fullsize Dodge and Plymouth passenger cars were never a hit on the hot rod popularity parade, but they represent Chrysler Corporation's first serious attempt to dominate drag racing.
Chrysler’s 426 Hemi is the corporation’s most famous engine of the classic muscle era, but it’s far from the only one. Before the Hemi became available for street duty in 1966 the top-performing ...
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